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Aboriginal Child Health and the Social Determinants: Why Are These Children So Disadvantaged?
- Source :
- Healthcare Quarterly. 14:42-51
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Longwoods Publishing, 2010.
-
Abstract
- Canada's original people consist of First Nations, Inuit and Metis peoples. Their estimated population is 1.17 million. The total fertility rate for the period 1996-2001 was 2.6 for Aboriginal women versus 1.5 for Canada (Statistics Canada 2006). Thus, a high proportion of this rapidly growing segment of the population are children. Numerous articles have reviewed the health status of Canada's Aboriginal children and shown comparatively high prevalence and incidence of most of the common diseases that affect children. This article highlights some of the more specific disparities, but also attempts to provide some historical context and a few composite case studies that illustrate how the social determinants, colonialism, jurisdictional issues, geography and healthcare can interact to amplify disproportionately the disadvantage these children have in so many ways. Much of the historical detail recounts the contact with First Nations people, the most numerous and the first group to have contact with European settlement.
- Subjects :
- Canada
Economic growth
Health Status
Total fertility rate
Population
Child Welfare
Public Policy
Context (language use)
Social class
Cost of Illness
Population Groups
Health care
Metis
Humans
Social determinants of health
Mortality
Child
Socioeconomics
education
education.field_of_study
business.industry
Politics
Disadvantaged
Geography
Social Class
Child, Preschool
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19296347
- Volume :
- 14
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Healthcare Quarterly
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1c7026c775c80fedc1bbd26f6c301588
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.12927/hcq.2010.21982